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    Bridge Financing Explained for Greater Victoria Sellers
    April 4, 2026

    Bridge financing is short-term borrowing that helps cover the gap when your next home purchase closes before the sale of your current home. In practical terms, it can let a seller use equity from the home they are selling to complete the purchase of the next property without waiting for the sale proceeds to arrive first. RBC describes bridge financing as a temporary option designed to “bridge” that timing gap, and notes that lenders typically want a firm sale agreement in place on the existing home. Why Greater Victoria sellers ask about it more in a balanced market Bridge financing becomes especially relevant when sellers want to move quickly on a purchase but do not want to feel rushed into selling first. That question matters in Greater Victoria right now because the market is offering more choice and less urgency than the tightest seller-market periods. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 579 sales in March 2026 and 3,261 active listings at month-end, and described the current environment as one where buyers and sellers both have opportunities, with more time for due diligence and decision-making. That kind of market can be helpful, but it also creates a planning challenge. Sellers may find the right replacement property before their own sale has completed. Bridge financing can be the tool that keeps the move possible. How bridge financing usually works The basic structure is simple: You buy your next home Your current home has a firm sale The closing dates do not line up A short-term loan covers the gap until your sale completes For example, if you are buying a new home on June 1 but your current home does not complete until June 20, a bridge loan may cover those 19 days. Once your sale closes, the bridge loan is typically paid off from the sale proceeds. RBC says bridge loan terms are commonly short-term, often up to six months, though actual terms vary by lender and situation. When bridge financing can make sense Bridge financing can be useful when: You have a firm accepted offer on your current home Your purchase closes before your sale You need access to equity for the down payment or closing funds You want to avoid a rushed sale or temporary move This is often relevant for sellers who are upsizing, downsizing, or trying to buy a specific property type that does not come up often. In those cases, bridge financing can create flexibility that makes the move more manageable. What sellers need to understand before using it Bridge financing is helpful, but it is not something to use casually. RBC specifically notes that bridge financing is expensive and not recommended as a matter of course. It is a short-term solution, not a default strategy. Here are the big points sellers should understand: A firm sale is usually important. Lenders often want confirmation that your current home is sold before approving bridge financing. It adds carrying costs. Because it is short-term borrowing, the cost can add up quickly if the gap is longer than expected. Closing dates matter. Even a strong sale and purchase can become stressful if dates are poorly coordinated. It works best with a clear financing plan. Your lender, mortgage broker, and Realtor should all be working from the same timeline. The biggest mistake to avoid The biggest mistake is treating bridge financing like a backup plan for an unsold home. Bridge financing is usually strongest when it is supporting a move that already has clear structure: a firm sale, a known completion date, and lender approval based on that timing. It is much riskier to assume financing will solve a weak sale plan, an aggressive purchase timeline, or a home that has not yet attracted serious buyers. In other words, bridge financing should support strategy, not replace it. How this affects Greater Victoria sellers specifically In a market with more listings and more buyer choice, sellers need to think carefully about timing. If your next purchase depends on the sale of your current home, pricing, preparation, and negotiation strategy all matter even more. A poorly timed sale can create stress. A well-timed one can make bridge financing either unnecessary or very short. That is why bridge financing is really a planning conversation before it becomes a lending conversation. In Greater Victoria’s current market, good sequencing can matter just as much as good pricing. VREB’s March 2026 data points to a market with solid inventory and more measured activity, which makes that sequencing work especially important. The bottom line Bridge financing explained for Greater Victoria sellers comes down to one idea: it is a short-term tool that can help when your purchase closes before your sale, but it works best when the rest of the move is already well planned. Used properly, it can reduce stress and help you secure your next home. Used without a clear strategy, it can add cost and pressure at exactly the wrong time. Bridge financing is not one-size-fits-all. Reach out to Faber Real Estate Group if you would like an introduction to a reliable mortgage broker to help you explore your options. Justin V., 5-Star Review, via Google “Scott and Cal were absolutely phenomenal! From the moment we met them, we knew we were in good hands. Their in-depth knowledge of the Victoria market was impressive, and they guided us through the entire home selling and buying process with expertise and patience. They were always available to answer our questions, and their negotiation skills were top-notch. Thanks to their hard work, we found our dream home! We highly recommend The Faber Group to anyone looking to buy or sell a property.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Selling Private or Hiring a Realtor: What BC Sellers Should Consider
    March 12, 2026

    If you are thinking about selling private or hiring a Realtor, the decision can feel straightforward at first. One option seems like it could save money. The other involves professional fees. But for most sellers, the real question is not just what each option costs. It is what each option helps protect, expose, and negotiate. A private sale can work in some cases. But it also puts more responsibility on the seller and can reduce the market reach that often helps produce stronger results. What does “selling privately” mean? Selling privately usually means you are trying to sell your home without hiring a Realtor to market and manage the listing. Some sellers already know the buyer. Others try to find one through social media, a lawn sign, private websites, or word of mouth. That may sound simpler. Sometimes it is. But once serious interest appears, the process quickly becomes more than just showing the home and agreeing on a price. What does a Realtor do for a seller? A Realtor’s role is not just putting a sign on the lawn. For sellers, a Realtor typically helps with: Pricing strategy Marketing and exposure Showings and buyer screening Offer handling Negotiation Disclosure guidance Coordination with lawyers, lenders, inspectors, and timelines Canadian Real Estate Association says sellers are almost always better served by the broader exposure offered by listing on an MLS System, and that greater exposure can increase the likelihood of more offers and a better result on price or terms. The biggest risks of selling privately 1. Fewer buyers may see your home This is often the most important trade-off. Canadian Real Estate Association explains that MLS Systems become more valuable as more buyers and sellers use them, and that placing a property on an MLS System gives it exposure to a broader pool of potential buyers. In practical terms, less exposure can mean: Fewer showings Less buyer competition Less urgency Fewer chances to improve price or terms A private sale might still find a buyer. What it may not do is attract the strongest buyer available in the current market. 2. It is harder to know if your price is truly right When a home is exposed to a broader market, sellers get clearer feedback. They can see whether the property is generating strong interest, weak interest, or multiple offers. The Province of BC notes that open market transfers are situations where anyone likely to be interested has the opportunity to make an offer, such as when a property is listed with a realtor or otherwise advertised for sale. When a sale is not clearly tested in the open market, fair market value may need to be supported in other ways. That does not mean every private sale is underpriced. It means the seller has less evidence that they achieved the best available outcome. 3. Negotiation gets harder when you do it alone Many sellers think negotiation is mostly about price. It is not. A strong offer also includes details like: Deposit amount Subject conditions Closing date Possession date Repair requests Risk of collapse before completion BCFSA notes that written offers are typically prepared on a Contract of Purchase and Sale and reviewed carefully so the terms reflect the parties’ intentions and are understood before signing. It also notes that when multiple written offers are received before one is accepted, they must be presented to the seller unless the seller has directed otherwise in writing. That structure matters. It helps sellers compare more than just the headline number. 4. Disclosure mistakes can become expensive later Disclosure is one of the biggest areas where sellers underestimate risk. BCFSA’s 2025 guidance says full and frank disclosure enhances a property’s marketability, and warns that refusing adequate disclosure can make a property harder to sell. It also notes that choosing a “Property No Disclosure Statement” may expose sellers to future litigation risk if latent defects are discovered after title transfer. In plain language, keeping things vague does not necessarily protect a seller. In some situations, it can do the opposite. 5. More of the workload shifts onto the seller A private sale does not remove paperwork, deadlines, or legal steps. It simply means more of that responsibility lands on the seller. Even when no Realtor is involved, the transaction still needs proper documentation, legal transfer work, and tax-related filings. The Province of BC notes that property transfer tax is based on fair market value at the date of registration unless an exemption applies. Buyers usually pay the property transfer tax, but sellers still need to manage their own legal, mortgage-discharge, and transaction-related responsibilities. The sale can feel simple until the details start stacking up. When selling privately can make sense There are situations where a private sale may be reasonable, such as: Selling to a family member Selling to a friend or neighbour Selling to a tenant Choosing privacy over maximum market exposure In these cases, the convenience may outweigh the broader marketing advantage. Even then, proper pricing, legal advice, and careful documentation still matter. When hiring a Realtor is often the stronger choice Hiring a Realtor is usually the better fit when a seller wants: Maximum exposure Better price discovery Clearer negotiation support Help managing forms and timelines Guidance on disclosure and risk A more structured process from start to finish For many homeowners, the real benefit is not just marketing. It is having someone reduce preventable mistakes while helping the seller make stronger decisions under pressure. The better question to ask Instead of asking, “Can I sell without a Realtor?” A better question is: “What am I taking on if I do?” That shift matters. Because the visible cost of representation is easy to see, but the hidden cost of weaker exposure, softer negotiation, or one avoidable mistake is often much harder to measure. Final thought Selling privately is not automatically the wrong choice. But it is rarely the simpler choice once pricing, negotiation, disclosure, and paperwork are all taken seriously. For many BC sellers, hiring a Realtor is less about convenience and more about reducing risk while giving the property the strongest chance in the market. If you are weighing whether to sell privately or work with professional representation, contact Faber Real Estate Group for practical advice on the selling approach that best fits your home and your goals. Brandon S., 5-Star Review, via Google “My wife and I sold our condo in View Royal and bought a place in Esquimalt with the help of The Faber Group. Scott helped us to find and buy the perfect home for our growing family in a very competitive market. He got to know our wants and needs and worked within our schedule with a small baby. Once we found the perfect place Scott helped us to get it for under the asking price and sold our condo in one day on the market with multiple offers over asking! We are so grateful that Scott helped us through this process, answering our many questions and alleviating our concerns. Thank you for helping us sell our first home and buy a beautiful house for our family.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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